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Joe Hage
🔥 Find me at MedicalDevicesGroup.net 🔥
March 2012
Medical Device PR expert: Sometimes PR is pointless
7 min reading time

Beverly Millson PRNow, don’t get me wrong.

Medical device public relations expert Beverly Millson does not think PR is useless for medical device companies.

In most cases.

Beverly has done outstanding work for her clients Össur and Ekso Bionics. In our discussion, Beverly shares some major client victories and tells us when “PR is useless.”

Joe Hage: Welcome to #MedDevice chat @BettinaTizzy. I found you on the Medical Devices Group and was intrigued by your work for @EksoBionics.

Beverly Millson: Thx for having me, Joe. It would be my pleasure to discuss PR for meddevices, especially what I’m doing with Ekso Bionics, the pioneer in exoskeletons, and Össur, a global orthopaedics leader.

I have managed Ekso Bionics’ PR for two years and Össur’s for 10.

Joe Hage: Have you spent your whole career in public relations? Have you always focused on medical devices?

Beverly Millson: I’ve been in advertising, marketing and PR for 30 years, the last 12 in medtech.

May I begin with a story about Össur?

Joe Hage: Yes, please do.

Beverly Millson: Össur develops and makes noninvasive orthopaedic devices, including prosthetics.

[caption id=”attachment_945″ align=”alignright” width=”238″ caption=”Olympian Oscar Pistorius”][/caption]Össur is known for its bionic prostheses, as well as the Flex-Foot Cheetah that bilateral amputee sprinter Oscar Pistorius runs on.

I had the opportunity to see Oscar run at the 2004 Paralympics. That’s when we knew we had to sign him up. Oscar is a one-of-a-kind athlete, so I persuaded Össur to pitch his story to US media.

As you can imagine, the story about a bilateral amputee from Pretoria who runs was not an easy sale.

Joe Hage: I think it’s a fascinating human-interest story. I’m surprised it wasn’t an “easy sale.”

Beverly Millson: Well, let me tell you what happened next.

Oscar Pistorius signed on Team Össur as an ambassador in 2006. Then the IAAF, the sports-governing body for Olympic track and field, denied him the right to compete.

IAAF denied Oscar the right to run on grounds that his prostheses gave him an advantage over able-bodied runners!

That's amazing! An **ADVANTAGE** versus able-bodied runners! As a PR specialist, you must have had a heyday with that episode! Suddenly, Össur was in a unique position of either agreeing that their product was that spectacular or denying it.

Össur is an ethical company, and it vehemently disagreed with the IAAF, saying that in no way did he have an advantage.

Wired magazine began working on a huge story about Oscar, including trips to Iceland and South Africa.

Joe Hage: So this experience was a gift for you. That’s pretty rare in #MedDevice PR, I would think.

Beverly Millson: It was a gift and killer. Soon after the Wired story broke in March of ’06 calls came in 24 hrs a day for months.

Joe Hage: That’s the kind of “killer” my readers would “kill for.”

It was definitely a unique experience, but every med device has a good story, if it's a good product. I'm going to challenge you there. A company with an aging portfolio, hospital target, and no new products. What do they have? What's the big news? Why would anyone care?

Beverly Millson: The main story is always the user. A big mistake that med device companies make is that they only work B2B.

Joe Hage: I’m going to disagree a bit. Yes, I can blog all I want about the benefits of an ECG exam. Patients can read it. They may even go to their doctor and request a heart exam.

That’s no reason a doctor, GPO, hospital, or purchasing agent is going to think about replacing their ECG machine. It’s well made, it lasts forever, and capital budgets are constricted.

Beverly Millson: If the product is outstandingly well made, lasts a decade and is already in all hospitals, why spend money on PR?

Joe Hage: So you agree, then? There are some companies that should NOT DO PR?

Because that’s quite different than what you said earlier. “every med device has a good story, if it’s a good product.”

If there's no way to grow the market, then PR is pointless ... UNLESS ... there's a crisis. Unless the product stops working or was recalled. They should be spending their $ on R&D to improve their product.

Joe Hage: Yes, then it will be good to have had a retained agency which understands the product and the market.

Beverly Millson: There are products out there – not medtech – that advertise just to keep their customers feeling the status symbol.

Joe Hage: Right, but a different target and a different market.

Let me change subjects a bit. The reason I wanted to interview you was I found the Ekso product so compelling. Please tell us about it.

Beverly Millson: As @EythorBender, Ekso Bionics’ CEO, says, the Ekso is to exoskeletons as the wooden foot is to prosthetics.

Joe Hage: Interesting analogy, “wooden foot.”

So “wooden foot” is like Prosthetics 101 and Ekso is Wearable Robotics 101? Is that what you mean?

[caption id=”attachment_951″ align=”alignleft” width=”164″ caption=”Amanda was wheelchair-bound for 19 years”][/caption]

Beverly Millson: Exactly. Ekso is just the beginning of an entirely new platform. Wearable robotics … now for paraplegics, later for all.

Ekso Bionics also developed HULC, which they licensed to Lockheed Martin. HULC enables the wearer to carry up to 200lbs for hours over all kinds of terrain.

I weigh 120 lbs, and could carry a 200-lb box for hours wearing HULC. It increases strength and endurance.

There are numerous industrial, geeky, and even sports-oriented possibilities for wearable robots.

Joe Hage: So the primary benefit is “extra strength”? Or restoring mobility to the injured?

Beverly Millson: It’s both. Ekso isn’t a prototype anymore. Ekso Bionics has begun selling the device to rehab centers. Craig Hospital was the first recipient of the commercial Ekso exoskeleton on Valentine’s Day!

Joe Hage: You were saying it’s very difficult to bring bionics to market. What makes that #MedDevice category different?

Beverly Millson: Bionics are generally expensive and unknown by regulatory and payer audiences. A challenge in almost every way.

Joe Hage: I can see where PR in that category would be very important.

Beverly Millson: Yes. Ekso Bionics’ CEO, Eythor Bender, is the world’s top expert on bringing bionics to market. I could talk all day about them.

Joe Hage: I am interested and may well follow up with you on that. In the meanwhile, Eythor’s Technology, Entertainment, and Design (TED) presentation, “Eythor Bender demos human exoskeletons,” was recently named among the best ever by HuffPo. I’ve attached it below.

For now, I’d like to close with the question, What would you like to tell the Medical Devices Group audience? What can we do for you?

Beverly Millson: I’m so happy to have found the MedDevice group on LinkedIn. Community in PR is everything. Let’s help each other.


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What’s up everyone, it my 1st go to discern by this site, and treatise is really productive in support of me,keep up posting such articles.

Joe Hage
MedicalMarcom.comx
joe@joehageonline.com
In reply to Beverly Millson.
I agree with you completely, Beverly.

Hospitals are patient-facing. In most cases, PR and social media are brand- and business-building efforts.

Beverly Millson
twitter.com/BettinaTizzyx
beverly@missingsock.com
In reply to Jay Van Buren.
Hallo Jay! Good to see you here. I would like to see hospitals and medical device companies much more involved with social media, so you make an excellent point. It’s the most immediate way to know what people like/dislike/ and hope for in your products, plus a way to communicate right back with them. The whole industry would benefit.

Beverly Millson
twitter.com/BettinaTizzyx
beverly@missingsock.com
In reply to Deborah Osment.
There are so many emerging technologies… I see no reason why the stethoscope should remain what it is and not become something more. I’m with you on that, Deborah.

There’s much more information about Ekso available at its still-in-the-works website: http://www.eksobionics.com (and more coming), and the blog: http://www.eksobionics.com/blog/. Our most recent information can be found in the latest press release: http://www.eksobionics.com/blog/2012/02/ekso-bionics-delivers-first-ekso-exoskeleton/

Thank you for your interest!

You are correct, Joe. It is estimated that 1% of the world’s population uses wheelchairs, but it is also believed that at least 1% more would use a wheelchair if they could afford it.

Joe Hage
MedicalMarcom.comx
joe@joehageonline.com
In reply to Deborah Osment.
Indeed.

In the meanwhile, I don’t expect to hear much about them.

Thanks for the back-and-forth.

Deborah Osment
deborahosment@yahoo.com
In reply to Joe Hage.
But, Joe, you have to look at the lowly stethoscope and the familiar ECG machine from the point of view that they are – and have long been – nothing but profit centers for their manufacturers. As far as I know, no one is investing millions to improve them. Should, however, such an improvement become available to the public, I’m guessing Time Magazine will be good for at least a paragraph on it.

Joe Hage
MedicalMarcom.comx
joe@joehageonline.com
In reply to Deborah Osment.
Deborah, I agree.

Ekso makes for a fascinating human interest story too. I understand one-percent of the world’s population is wheelchair bound (right, Beverly?).

So Ekso’s PR helps grow the entire category. PR for wearable robotics is probably some of the very best spending the company could do from a marketing perspective.

Much less so for the lonely stethoscope and familiar ECG machine.

Joe Hage
MedicalMarcom.comx
joe@joehageonline.com
In reply to Jay Van Buren.
I’m with you in theory, Jay. I wonder how likely it is the positive mentions would aggregate to a level deserving of a page-one Google mention, though.

Deborah Osment
deborahosment@yahoo.com
I recently had a dental exam at the University of Michigan Dental School and, during it, was asked if I would let them take (what I believe was called) a panoramic x-ray on a new machine that had just been installed.

This experience led me to think about the dynamics of the world of PR. As each new groundbreaking device is introduced to the market, a certain buzz is created and the consumer gets an idea of what the strengths and limitations are of these machines.

However, I know of very few devices that remain static. Even if all goes well, improvements are made and new uses are discovered.

Everything is going to be tweaked and the slightest tweak may bring forth volumes of new information. It is, I believe, the responsible manufacturer that makes sure that the consumer is able to access information if they wish to and the internet is an infinite storehouse of such knowledge.

For instance, I want to know more about Ekso!

Jay Van Buren
early-adopter.comx
jay@early-adopter.com
I have something to add to the thought about the case of a medical device company that has products in place working well in tons of hospitals — what do they need PR for?

I would say generating tweets, facebook posts, blog posts etc. about the device working well, helping people, telling the stories of those people is a way of “banking” good will and positive stories that would function as a cushion JUST in CASE some kind of crisis or negative story suddenly came up and started making the rounds.

It means a Google search for that device’s name isn’t going to only produce marketing material and stuff about the bad news story – there will be some context in the search results to which will effect how everyone sees it. “Device loved by thousands also has problem” would be the headline (ideally).

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